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Archive for September, 2025

Thirsty Dragon vs. Parched Tiger: India Plans Its Own Mega Dam To Counter China Water Fears

Via The Frontier Post, a report on Indian plans to build its own mega dam to counter China water fears: On a football field ringed by misty mountains, the air rang with fiery speeches as tribesmen protested a planned mega-dam — India’s latest move in its contest with China over Himalayan water. India says the […]

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How War and Drought Resulted in Lebanon’s Worst Water Crisis in Decades

Via Arab News, a look at how war and drought have resulted in Lebanon’s worst water crisis in decades: With the Litani River drying and Lake Qaraoun at record lows, aid groups warn the crisis could spiral into a nationwide emergency UN agencies say urgent funding is needed to keep Lebanon’s water crisis from triggering […]

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Scientists Predict Extreme Global Water Shortages by 2100

Via Gizmodo, a report on new research that suggests climate change could leave 74% of the world’s drought-prone regions at high risk of severe and prolonged droughts by the end of the century: Earth’s climate and its water are inextricably linked—one cannot exist without the other. As the climate undergoes unprecedented, human-driven change, the global […]

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The Thirsty Dragon: China’s Himalayan Mega-Dam Is A Global Threat

Via Nikkei Asia, commentary on China’s planned Himalayan mega-dam – the largest dam ever conceived – symbolizes China’s bid, from oil to water, for 21st-century dominance: China is about to upend the world’s hydrological balance — with consequences as far-reaching as climate change itself. Its $168 billion Himalayan super-dam represents not merely the world’s costliest […]

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The Impossibly Expensive Plan to Save Texas’s Water Supply

Courtesy of Texas Monthly, an article on one potential solution to Texas’s water scarcity crisis: The year is 1969, and revolution is in the air. Protests clog American campuses and streets. Richard Nixon enters the White House on behalf of his “silent majority.” NASA puts men on the moon. And the hippie counterculture threatens to […]

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Inside the Fight for Texas’s Most Precious Resource

Via Texas Monthly, a look at how – in Texas – elected leaders, rich investors, and small-town residents are stumbling over the same question: Who owns the state’s water? I’m riding shotgun in his battle-tested Chevy Suburban, an actual shotgun rubbing against my left leg, when Bob Sanders tells me that it was water that […]

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